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Oshawa Creek is a watercourse that flows 50 kilometres (31 mi) from its headwaters in the Oak Ridges Moraine to its mouth on Lake Ontario, at Oshawa, Ontario. [1] It drains a watershed of 120 square kilometres (46 sq mi). In its lowest reaches, in Oshawa, two tributaries, Goodman's Creek and Montgomery Creek, join the watercourse.
The moraine's hydrological system is inter-twined with a regional flow system not bound by the morphological limits of the moraine. For this reason, environmentalists and researchers promote an aggressive protection strategy extending beyond the moraine, thus ensuring a contiguously protected hydrological system.
Sturgeon Creek (or) Sturgeon River; Sleeman Creek; La Vallée River; Rainy Lake. Turtle River. ... Oshawa Creek. Goodman's Creek; Montgomery Creek (Ontario) Farewell ...
The Scugog carrying place was the southern end of a route connecting Lake Ontario and Lake Scugog, in what is now Oshawa, Ontario. [1] [2] According to the Oshawa Museum travellers followed the route up Oshawa Creek to where it forked with Harmony Creek, with one branch leading to Lake Scugog and the other to Lake Simcoe.
Previously the district of Oshawa consisted of the southern and eastern parts of the City of Oshawa south and east of a line drawn from west to east along King Street West, north along Oshawa Creek, east along Rossland Road West, north along Simcoe Street North and east along Winchester Road East. The riding includes the communities of Kedron ...
This is a list of the census metropolitan areas and agglomerations in Canada by population, using data from the 2021 Canadian census and the 2016 Canadian census. [1] Each entry is identified as a census metropolitan area (CMA) or a census agglomeration (CA) as defined by Statistics Canada.
Just west of Columbus on a branch of the Oshawa Creek at the SE corner of Thornton Rd. and Columbus Rd. existed the largest mill in the entire area. Here, in 1835, the impressive, four-storey woollen mills of Mathewson and Ratcliffe were operated by a crew of 50, which was much larger than the other mills that dotted the landscape.
"Tony Creek", for the Stoney Creek area, due to the significant Italian-Canadian population [133] Kingston "The Limestone City" — in reference to the large number of historical buildings constructed from local limestone. [134] "Ktown" — a shortening of the city's name used frequently by local businesses and radio hosts. [135] Kitchener